释义 |
Definition of dogmatics in English: dogmaticsplural noun dɒɡˈmatɪksdɔɡˈmædɪks treated as singular A system of principles laid down by an authority, especially the Roman Catholic Church, as undeniably true. it is a work of analysis, not of dogmatics Example sentencesExamples - As church dogmatics, as the faith of the community seeking understanding, theology is inherently communitarian.
- American neo-orthodoxy in the 1940s and 1950s typically meant a compound of Brunner's dogmatics, Niebuhr's theological ethics, and the scripture scholarship of the biblical theology movement.
- When done in spirit and in truth, both theology and worship alike, dogmatics and doxology, are a fitting tribute.
- ‘It's the study of dogmatics, you know, universal truth, what you know as opposed to what you believe,’ he replies.
- Almost single-handedly Karl Barth retrieved dogmatics for the mainstream of academic theology after its marginalization in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Definition of dogmatics in US English: dogmaticsplural noundôɡˈmadiksdɔɡˈmædɪks treated as singular A system of principles laid down by an authority, especially the Roman Catholic Church, as incontrovertibly true. it is a work of analysis, not of dogmatics Example sentencesExamples - American neo-orthodoxy in the 1940s and 1950s typically meant a compound of Brunner's dogmatics, Niebuhr's theological ethics, and the scripture scholarship of the biblical theology movement.
- As church dogmatics, as the faith of the community seeking understanding, theology is inherently communitarian.
- Almost single-handedly Karl Barth retrieved dogmatics for the mainstream of academic theology after its marginalization in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
- When done in spirit and in truth, both theology and worship alike, dogmatics and doxology, are a fitting tribute.
- ‘It's the study of dogmatics, you know, universal truth, what you know as opposed to what you believe,’ he replies.
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